Walker v. Strout Realty Agency

175 A. 259, 115 Pa. Super. 169, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 407
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1934
DocketAppeal 283
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 175 A. 259 (Walker v. Strout Realty Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Strout Realty Agency, 175 A. 259, 115 Pa. Super. 169, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 407 (Pa. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

James, J.,

This is an action in trespass brought by Mary Walker, the appellant, for the death of her husband, Edwin T. Walker, who was killed by an automobile driven by an agent of defendant on December 5, 1930.

The jury by their verdict found the defendant negligent and absolved the deceased, Edwin T. Walker, of contributory negligence and under instructions by the learned trial judge, brought in a verdict for nominal damages. That part of the charge relating to the measure of damages reads as follows: “There is no proof here that at the time he was killed that he had any income or would have any income, was earning any money from which the plaintiff could derive any advantage. It is not what a man earns but what advantage is derived from his earning power that the wife is entitled to a verdict by reason of his earnings, and there is nothing of that entering into the case under the testimony produced in this particular case. As a result of that, you will, if you find a verdict for the plaintiff, simply find a verdict in nominal damages. That may be, as we sometimes put in a deed, a dollar, or sometimes hear verdicts of six and one-fourth cents, but there is nothing in the proof that will sustain anything more than nominal damages.”

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for 6t4 cents. Plaintiff’s motion and reasons for a new trial, the 4th reason being the instructions as above set forth as to nominal damages, was refused, hence this appeal.

Counsel for appellant has filed six assignments of error. Assignment No. 3 apparently is intended to *172 cover that part of the charge of the court as to nominal damages, abové quoted. We will treat it as so doing.

The deceased husband was a man 85 years of age and had an expectation of life, according to the mortality tables, of 2.8 years. Plaintiff and deceased had been married between thirty-one and thirty-two years. As to his habits of industry and capacity for work we quote the following testimony:

Plaintiff testified. “Q. Was he employed all the time on work around the house and on the farm? A. Well, most of the time he wasof course he always neighbored in the fall with people threshing; that way he was always away a while at a time, but he generally always had work, you know, at home to keep him busy. Q. Was he an industrious man? A. Yes, he was, very. Q. Was he working at something all the time? A. Yes, sir, (67a). James Fockler, a son-in-law, testified; Q. Did you know Edwin T. Walker? A. Yes, sir. Q. He is your father-in-law?1 A. Yes, sir. Q. How long have you known him? A. Four years Christmas time. Q. What was the condition of his health during that time you knew him? A. Very good. Q. Was he an active man? A. He was. Q'. Would he make a hand with other men? (Objected to) Q. State whether or not he was working at something practically all the time. A. He was; he worked, he was very busy on the farm with his farm work, had it right along, always right along at the proper time. Q. Do you know anything about his building or helping to build those houses? A. I do. Q. Did you work with him? A. I did. By the court; Q. You say you have known him for four years? A. Yes, sir, four years this Christmas time. Q. What kind of activities was he capable of entering during the past four years and particularly just before his death? A. Well, he was very active and husky; seemed to get around very good; he was very active and husky; he wasn’t a very large man, *173 but he was very husky for his size and age.’ Q. Now, he was a man of eighty-five years of age? A. Yes, sir. Q. What effect had his age on his activities at that time, at the time of his death? Had he slowed up? A. Well, now, the only thing I could notice is he was a little nervous, that was all, but otherwise he would get around very good. Q. How was he on his feet? A. Very quick, sure footed; he could walk faster than I could. Q. Did you know of any existence of organic trouble? A. I do not. (79a, 80a, 81a) J. B. Barn-hart, a neighbor testified; — Q. Was Mr. Walker a healthy man? A. Yes, sir, Mr. Walker at his age was as stout a man as we had in Concord Township. Q. How was he as a hand to do physical work? (Mr. Brandon) When? Q. At the time of his death? A. Well, in the year 1930 I helped build that house where he resided at the time of his death. Mr. Walker purchased that house from J. P. Haney and he come over there and he helped me to tear it down and he worked every day with me up till the time I had it erected. ......Q. Mr. Barnhart, Mr. Walker worked with you? A. Yes, sir, and he also was — I worked, was his clerk on the election board.......Q. Do you know of any sales of stuff he made on the farm?......A. I know he always had oats and stuff like that and hay, plenty of it; he produced it there; there is no argument to anybody. Q. Do you know his selling any hogs to you? A. No, he never sold no hogs to me, but he worked for me over there, threshed and I paid him. Q. What did you pay him? A. At that time I paid at the rate of $4.00 a day. That was in the year 1929. ......By the court. Q. When was it that he worked for you? A. He worked in the fall of 1929 and he was killed in 1930, December 5th......Q. Now what did you pay him? A. I paid him at the rate of $4.00 a day; I paid all my threshers that. By the court. Not what he paid the others; just what he paid this man. *174 A. Well, I paid Mr. Walker $4.00 a day. Q. Nov/, did you work with him in the building of that house? A. I did. Q. Did he do as much work as you did? A. He did, yes, sir. Q. Was he an exceptional man for his age? A. He was. (67a, 68a, 69a, 70a, 71a) David Gold another neighbor, testified, — Q. Did you know Edwin T. Walker? A. I do — I did. Q. How long had you known him? A. Oh, forty years. Q. What was his general condition of health? A. Good. Q. Did you ever know him to be sick? A. I never did. Q. Had you known him intimately? A. Oh, yes, yes, sir. Q. Neighbor to him? A. Yes, sir. Q. Was he a man that could do> a day’s work and did? A. He could. Q. Did that continue up to the time of his decease? A. Yes, sir, it did; he built two houses just before he was killed, a short time. Q. Did he work on those houses? A. He did, — on the — Yes, the last house was built by contract; but the first one he worked on. (75a, 76a.)”

According to this testimony Edwin T. Walker, although 85 years of age, was a strong, active, vigorous and industrious man. He was constantly employed, up to the day he was killed, either working on or about his own farm, or “neighboring.” He “made a hand.’’ He raised and sold grain, hogs, and butter. In 1930, the-year in which he was killed, he, together with Mr. Barnhart, built the house in which he lived. In the fall of the year 1929 he worked for Mr. Barnhart helping to thresh and was paid by Mr. Barnhart at the rate of $4.00 per day.

In the recent case of Pilipovich et al. v. Pittsburgh Coal Co., — Pa. —, 172 A. 136, in an opinion by Drew, J., we find reiterated what has been the general rule of damages applicable to actions resulting in death to be as follows: “The true measure of damages is the pecuniary loss suffered without any solatium for mental suffering or grief and the pecuniary loss is what *175

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Bluebook (online)
175 A. 259, 115 Pa. Super. 169, 1934 Pa. Super. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-strout-realty-agency-pasuperct-1934.